HERTFORDSHIRE FESTIVAL OF MUSIC 2024, 7-15 June

The Power of 2: Musical and Artistic Dialogues

Principal Artists: Katya Apekisheva & Charles Owen, piano duo

Featured Living Composer: Tom Randle

“The friendly, accessible vibe of Hertfordshire Festival of Music was accompanied by the very highest level of music- making and extremely imaginative programmes in beautiful locations.”
Dame Judith Weir DBE, Master of the King’s Music

Now in its eighth year, the theme of this year’s Hertfordshire Festival of Music is ‘The Power of 2: Musical and Artistic Dialogues. During the course of the Festival,the profound connections and conversations between musicians, artists, and their audiences – and the essence of these interactions – will be explored through a series of concerts, talks and other events with a fascinating range of musicians, artists and original thinkers.

HFoM is honoured to have dazzling piano duo Katya Apekisheva and Charles Owen, one of the most highly-acclaimed piano duos performing today, as this year’s Principal Artists. In addition to a two-piano recital at All Saints’ Church in Hertford, there will also be an opportunity to gain artistic insights and inspiration in a free piano duo masterclass given by Katya Apekisheva at the beautiful Queenswood School in Hatfield.

The festival opens with a dialogue, ‘My Life in Music’ – a conversation and performance with singer/ composer Tom Randle and the Rossetti Ensemble, featuring his own music alongside that of Vaughan Williams and Dvorak.

Violinist Litsa Tunnah returns this year and is joined by Festival Artistic Director James Francis Brown in a lunchtime recital featuring his second Violin Sonata as well as works by Vaughan Williams and Beethoven.

Friday June 14th will be a day of songs and tangos with a documentary on composer David Matthews, performances by the Choir of St Andrew, culminating in a lively evening with Tango Siempre, exploring the rich and passionate history of tango from its origins in the Buenos Aires underworld to the innovative ‘Tango Nuevo’ of Astor Piazzolla. In a special highlight, the ensemble will present unique arrangements of tangos by the esteemed British composer David Matthews.

On the final Saturday, clarinettist Poppy Beddoe and pianist Timothy End join forces for a concert featuring a special world premiere, while the grand finale sees Principal Artists Katya Apekisheva and Charles Owen give a thrilling two-piano recital at All Saints’ Church. This promises to be an event full of dynamic interplay and remarkable artistic unity.

Other Festival highlights:

  • ‘Music and the Divided Brain’ – Artistic Director James Francis Brown will be joined by violinist Sara Trickey in an interview with esteemed psychiatrist and author, Iain McGilchrist
  • ‘Duality in Art,’ at the Hertford Museum with art historian Barry Dodge.
  • Debut of the newly formed Mira Trio.
  • ‘Coffee Concert’ – a new event highlighting young, gifted musicians poised on the cusp of their careers.

This year’s Festival offers an exceptional series of musical dialogues, where each note and every word will tell a fascinating tale of collaboration and inspiration.

BROWSE EVENTS & BOOK TICKETS

HFoM plans 21 events/outreach projects in community venues, anticipating engagement with around 1,500 individuals (performers, audiences, participants/beneficiaries).  Four of the concerts/events are free, the remainder with discounted ticket prices for concessions.  

In addition, HFoM is delighted to continue its vitally important outreach work. Our commitment to musical education continues in collaboration with Queenswood School, delivering the Masterclass for talented young musicians.  During the Festival period, in partnership with Sing from the Heart, specially trained musicians share the gift of music with selected care homes throughout the county of Hertfordshire with those living with dementia, including their carers and families. We are grateful for the support from Durkan Homes for their support of the Music in Mind project.

Full details of this year’s Festival at https://www.hertsmusicfest.org.uk/performances-and-events-2024


Hertfordshire Festival of Music is the vision of the late Tom Hammond and composer James Francis Brown, and is registered as a charity supported by a board of Trustees and a team of volunteers.

Since its founding in 2016, HFoM has grown rapidly from a small weekend event to one of the UK’s major summer music festivals, featuring international artists and ensembles alongside innovative outreach and educational projects, all based in and around the attractive historic county town of Hertford. HFoM has presented concerts that have inspired extraordinary audience responses to artists such as Tasmin Little CBE, Dame Emma Kirkby, Sir Stephen Hough, Steven Isserlis CBE, Ben Goldscheider, the Carducci Quartet, Emma Johnson MBE, Jack Hancher, the Galliard Ensemble, Chloe Hanslip, ZRI and The Prince Consort.

HFoM receives no Arts Council funding and is fortunate to receive support from a number of charitable trusts and foundations, county, district and town councils, local businesses and other organisations. A ‘Deer Friends’ Scheme allows individuals to play an important role in supporting the Festival and furthering its scope and potential. Sponsors include: Hertford Town Council, East Herts District Council, Queenswood School, Durkan Homes, Longmores Solicitors, Hertfordshire County Council, Austins Funeral Service, Azets Wealth Management Limited, The Garrick Charitable Trust, Ware Town Council, Soundbites at All Saints’ Church, Hertford

The Festival offers affordable ticket prices, several free events, concessions for those under 24 in full-time education, free tickets for the under 8s and a complementary ticket for a carer accompanying those patrons with access needs.

HFoM exists to celebrate and nurture exceptional music-making, featuring some of the world’s finest performers. The Festival also supports professional and young musicians from Hertfordshire, presents fascinating music by living composers and devises major, innovative projects for education and participation. Hertford is just over twenty miles from central London, easy to get to by rail and road, but nestled in the beautiful countryside of the Lea Valley. Most concerts take place within a ten-minute stroll of the town’s centre, which boasts excellent restaurants, many independent shops, and pleasant accommodation.

Website: www.hertsmusicfest.org.uk

TwitterX: @HertMusicFest Instagram: @hertsfestofmusic Facebook: facebook.com/Hertsmusicfest/

Registered Charity Number 1175716

Residents both local and from further afield, including the Mayor of Hertford, Cllr Vicky Smith, attended a free, inaugural concert heralding the return of the Hertfordshire Festival of Music (HFoM). 

Renowned violinist Litsa Tunnah, who performed at the Festival in 2023, played at the concert, accompanied on the piano by Artistic Director, James Francis Brown. The concert took place at St Andrew’s Church in Hertford on Thursday 29 February. 

James Francis Brown, HFoM Artistic Director, said: “We were delighted to see such a large gathering of people both familiar and new, in shared appreciation for the music and what the festival is achieving. We are busy planning the full Festival, which takes place in June, but this inaugural event provided music lovers an opportunity to hear about our plans and enjoy some wonderful music.” 

Planning for this year’s Hertfordshire Festival of Music, which takes place from 7 to 15 June 2024, is well underway. This year’s festival theme is The Power of 2: Musical and Artistic Dialogues, embracing the concept of partnerships – with the “whole” being more than the “sum of the parts”.  The full programme of events and artists will be announced soon.

Over the last eight years, the Festival has been built on the involvement, support and encouragement of Hertford and the county’s communities. 

The Hertfordshire Festival of Music, which is a registered charity (charity no. 1175716), is an annual summer celebration of classical music, based in and around Hertford. The Festival first took place in 2016. 

There are many ways that residents and businesses can get involved in the Festival, from volunteering at events to supporting the charity financially. For more information, contact info@hertsmusicfest.org.uk or visit www.hertsmusicfest.org.uk.

the very highest level of music-making and extremely imaginative programmes” – Dame Judith Weir CBE, Master of the King’s Music (HFoM Featured Living Composer in 2021)

(Text by R Beahan, Trustee of HFoM)

Conductor and festival director Tom Hammond thinks we should all bother with music. In this guest post, he explains why and previews this year’s Hertfordshire Festival of Music.

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I’m writing this less than two weeks before the opening of the 2019 Hertfordshire Festival of Music (HFoM), with the sweaty brow of the accidental concert promoter desperately hoping to see more tickets flying off the shelves.

We’ve programmed some fabulous music and musicians in this our fourth year: Fauré, Haydn, Schumann, Ravel, Mozart….with Steven Isserlis, Orchestra of the Swan, Anthony Marwood, Clare Hammond, the Carducci Quartet, to name only a few.

It’s not just classical music traditionally presented (although there’s some of that, and no apologies for it!) with two performances from the effervescent ZRI mashing Brahms with klezmer and gypsy styles plus their need live-to-film performance Adventures with Charlie Chaplin, an amazing jazz trio in a magical venue, and even a guided visit to Haydn’s summer holiday home when he was here in 1791. Plus three Featured Living Composers (Peter Fribbins, Alan Mills, James Francis Brown) and three major outreach projects involving more than 200 young people. Basically shed-loads of stuff, and really good stuff!

Since the Festival began – the initial germ of the idea coming to me back in 2015 – we’ve welcomed around 2,500 people to concerts in Hertford and Hertfordshire, given education and performance opportunities to around 500 younger people (schoolchildren as well as conservatoire level students) and raised something like £150,000 in external funds and Box Office revenue. Raising that sort of money for music is incredibly hard work as anyone who’s ever tried will know, taking hours of your life that could be spent doing vastly more enjoyable things….

The money that we’ve raised has gone directly into the music economy via paying our artists – about £75,000 on musician’s fees alone, and we pay at a decent rate –  plus all the other elements of the musical food chain, including commissions, hire of copyright materials, piano tuners, keyboard hire, sound and lighting equipment, etc., etc. Where that money certainly isn’t going is into my back pocket, nor that of my co-Artistic Director. We’ve also got a very hard-working board of trustees, because we’re now properly formalised as a charity, plus our FOH team who also do it for the love of music.

And why on earth would anyone do this?!

I have asked myself that question many times, not least as so many areas of running a Festival are things for which I’ve had absolutely no training, experience or aptitude and I’m already pretty busy with my main work as a conductor and producer. But, when I read my social media newsfeeds, or see classical music mentioned in the national media, it’s too often report after report about cuts in music education and how music is being marginalised. Or how to make it ‘relevant’. Or how it’s seen as for only posh people…. You don’t need me to go on because it’s jaw-clenchingly boring to do so, and moaning is too easy and the time could be better spent doing something about it.

What I and my colleagues at HFoM are trying to do, albeit in a nascent way which needs constant refinement, is simply put amazing music on in appropriate spaces that heighten the audience experience, plus open out opportunities for young people, and try to buck the above trend. As a colleague of mine once said to me, we are attempting to act as incubators of this amazing art form and when the day finally comes and politicians actually read the gazillions of studies that show how music helps people in so many ways and fund it again, someone can buy us all a pint.

Until then, if anyone fancies coming along and helping us continue beyond this year we have plenty of tickets left to sell. With only two exceptions, you can walk to all our performances in less than twenty minutes from train stations, all of which are well-served in and out of London. It will be light well into the evening, hopefully sunny and warm too. Tickets are not expensive, indeed some events are totally free, many offer £5 seats for anyone in full-time education, and they are in nice places with good pubs, restaurants and countryside nearby.

Hertfordshire Festival of Music runs from Thursday 13 to Sunday 23 June 2019. This year’s principal artist is cellist Steven Isserlis who will be giving masterclasses and performances during the festival. Full programme of events

Tom Hammond is co-Artistic Director of Hertfordshire Festival of Music, and a conductor and record producer.

www.hertsmusicfest.org.uk

Meet the Artist interview with Tom Hammond